OMG... I laughed so loud, the funniest I've seen. Also I'm always amazed at how elegant the men and women are in this bygone era. The women are beautifully styled and the men are clean shaven and well groomed. We live in such a grungie world now!
Might this be found in Steve Allen's living room? Not if Jayne has anything to say about it! This was a hilarious segment, a lot of fun; thank you very much for sharing this (and other classic WHAT'S MY LINE? segments) with us!!!!!
@TrevWks Calendars of that era were made with spiral springs. Each page was separate and moved around the spring. The spring would be a substantial and critical part of the calendar.
Surprisingly, I purchased one of the original Monroe calanders for a gift, about a year ago ,they were beautifully done. Never thought I see this topic discussed here. Too bad Marilyn wasnt a Mystery guest. Thanks much again for posting all these shows.
true. does anyone know why MM has never been invited to be a mystery guest? From 1956 till 1961 she lived in New York.. so it would not have been not to far for her to show up at the studio....
you CAN'T have Marilyn Monroe talk, the whole panel would know her immediately. They did have the female judo instructor who was a dead ringer for her though...
@@ulrichlehnhardt4293 It was actually on one of her contracts that she was not aloud to make many television appearances, as she was more a movie type character and television would "not be good for her image".
@TrevWks actually, if you think about it, giving "no" to those questions would be misleading. staples (or as another poster pointed out, spirals) are made of metal, and you do move the parts of the calendar by necessity. it was up to them to zero in on the yes answers and get to the heart of the matter.
There were certain guests that would have been so recognisable the panel would have guested immediately. Marlyn Monroe And Elvis Presley we’re in this category Mores the pity. A great show from long ago. Now we just have relatity shows. Yuk
I totally agree. Personally I think the lighter her hair, the prettier she looked. Her beautiful face just pops and gets more accentuated when her hair is light. But her true beauty came from within anyway.
He didn't specify that it was a necessity to live, only that it was a necessity in the broad sense of the word. A calendar is certainly a necessity to conduct business, maintain appointments, etc.
Well I guess this proves those wrong that claim LGBTQ men never appeared on TV in the 1950s. Bennett makes it pretty clear by guessing the guy is an "interior designer". Art Gasior lived a long life and spent 61 years married to his wife.
Beginning in the 1950s, my father too sold advertising novelties, including calendars also reflecting MM. After I learned he placed his old samples in our newspaper pile, that began my earliest sex-ed.